Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Populus euphratica

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Kingdom
  
Family
  
Scientific name
  
Populus euphratica

Rank
  
Species

Order
  
Genus
  
Populus

Higher classification
  
Cottonwood

Populus euphratica Populus Euphratica RNASeq Blog

Similar
  
Cottonwood, European aspen, Salicaceae, Haloxylon ammodendron, Populus alba

Populus euphratica, commonly known as the Euphrates poplar or desert poplar, is a species of poplar tree in the willow family.

Contents

Populus euphratica Populus euphratica Wikipedia

Description

Populus euphratica Populus euphratica Plant Biodiversity of SouthWestern Morocco

The Euphrates poplar is a medium-sized deciduous tree that may grow to a height of about 15 m and a girth of 2.5 m where conditions are favourable. The stem is typically bent and forked; old stems have thick, rough, olive-green bark. While the sapwood is white, the heartwood is red, darkening to almost black at the centre. The roots spread widely but not deeply. The leaves are highly variable in shape. The flowers are borne as catkins, those of the male are 25–50 mm long, those of the female 50–70 mm. The fruits are ovoid-lanceolate capsules, 7–12 mm long, containing tiny seeds enveloped in silky hairs.

Distribution and habitat

Populus euphratica Populus euphratica Plant Biodiversity of SouthWestern Morocco

The species has a very wide range, occurring naturally from North Africa, across the Middle East and Central Asia to western China. It may be found in dry temperate broadleaf and mixed forests and subtropical dry broadleaf forests at altitudes of up to 4000 m above sea level. It is a prominent component of tugay floodplain ecosystems along river valleys in arid and semi-arid regions, mixed with willow, tamarisk and mulberry in dense thickets. It grows well on land that is seasonally flooded and is tolerant of saline and brackish water. Much used as a source of firewood, its forests have largely disappeared or become fragmented over much of its natural range.

Uses

Populus euphratica httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

The species is used in agroforestry to provide leaves as fodder for livestock, timber and, potentially, fibre for making paper. It is also used in afforestation programs on saline soils in desert regions, and to create windbreaks and check erosion. The bark is reported to have antihelminthic properties.


Populus euphratica Populus euphratica God as a Gardener

References

Populus euphratica Wikipedia